- VoIP & Phone Systems
The Guide to UCaaS: Unified Communications as a Service
18 Mar, 2026







£48.60 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For the money, the Kingston DataTraveler 256GB microDuo 3C is a pretty sensible “grab-and-go” stick. The dual USB‑A + USB‑C setup is genuinely useful in day-to-day UK office life because you can plug it straight into both older desks and newer laptops/phones without faffing about with adapters. 256GB also means it’s not just for file shuffling anymore—you can actually keep a small toolbox of installers, docs, or shared media and move it around without playing storage Tetris. At £40.99 ex‑VAT, it’s priced like a value option rather than a premium brand-flex, and Kingston generally delivers consistent reliability for this kind of mainstream use.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it if you need it for heavy daily transfers (large video archives, repeated backups, lots of batch work). If your workflow is “move tens of gigabytes often,” you’ll feel the limitations versus faster, higher-end drives pretty quickly, and cheap sticks can also be less ideal for frequent large writes over time. But for standard document/media sharing, occasional backups of small projects, or team use where compatibility matters more than raw speed, it’s a solid pick—especially for mixed fleets of USB‑A and USB‑C devices.

Samsung
Samsung MUF-512DA - USB flash drive - 512 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1 / USB-C - blue

Samsung
Samsung MUF-64DA - USB flash drive - 64 GB - USB-C 3.2 Gen 1 - blue

Kingston
Kingston IronKey D500S - USB flash drive - encrypted - FIPS 140-3 Level 3 - 64 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1 - TAA Compliant

Kingston
Kingston IronKey Keypad 200 - USB flash drive - encrypted - FIPS 140-3 Level 3 - 64 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1